1/*
2 * WARNING: do not edit!
3 * Generated by Makefile from ../include/openssl/ui.h.in
4 *
5 * Copyright 2001-2020 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
6 *
7 * Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
8 * this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
9 * in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
10 * https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html
11 */
12
13
14
15#ifndef OPENSSL_UI_H
16# define OPENSSL_UI_H
17# pragma once
18
19# include <openssl/macros.h>
20# ifndef OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_3_0
21# define HEADER_UI_H
22# endif
23
24# include <openssl/opensslconf.h>
25
26# ifndef OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_1_1_0
27# include <openssl/crypto.h>
28# endif
29# include <openssl/safestack.h>
30# include <openssl/pem.h>
31# include <openssl/types.h>
32# include <openssl/uierr.h>
33
34/* For compatibility reasons, the macro OPENSSL_NO_UI is currently retained */
35# ifndef OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_3_0
36# ifdef OPENSSL_NO_UI_CONSOLE
37# define OPENSSL_NO_UI
38# endif
39# endif
40
41# ifdef __cplusplus
42extern "C" {
43# endif
44
45/*
46 * All the following functions return -1 or NULL on error and in some cases
47 * (UI_process()) -2 if interrupted or in some other way cancelled. When
48 * everything is fine, they return 0, a positive value or a non-NULL pointer,
49 * all depending on their purpose.
50 */
51
52/* Creators and destructor. */
53UI *UI_new(void);
54UI *UI_new_method(const UI_METHOD *method);
55void UI_free(UI *ui);
56
57/*-
58 The following functions are used to add strings to be printed and prompt
59 strings to prompt for data. The names are UI_{add,dup}_<function>_string
60 and UI_{add,dup}_input_boolean.
61
62 UI_{add,dup}_<function>_string have the following meanings:
63 add add a text or prompt string. The pointers given to these
64 functions are used verbatim, no copying is done.
65 dup make a copy of the text or prompt string, then add the copy
66 to the collection of strings in the user interface.
67 <function>
68 The function is a name for the functionality that the given
69 string shall be used for. It can be one of:
70 input use the string as data prompt.
71 verify use the string as verification prompt. This
72 is used to verify a previous input.
73 info use the string for informational output.
74 error use the string for error output.
75 Honestly, there's currently no difference between info and error for the
76 moment.
77
78 UI_{add,dup}_input_boolean have the same semantics for "add" and "dup",
79 and are typically used when one wants to prompt for a yes/no response.
80
81 All of the functions in this group take a UI and a prompt string.
82 The string input and verify addition functions also take a flag argument,
83 a buffer for the result to end up with, a minimum input size and a maximum
84 input size (the result buffer MUST be large enough to be able to contain
85 the maximum number of characters). Additionally, the verify addition
86 functions takes another buffer to compare the result against.
87 The boolean input functions take an action description string (which should
88 be safe to ignore if the expected user action is obvious, for example with
89 a dialog box with an OK button and a Cancel button), a string of acceptable
90 characters to mean OK and to mean Cancel. The two last strings are checked
91 to make sure they don't have common characters. Additionally, the same
92 flag argument as for the string input is taken, as well as a result buffer.
93 The result buffer is required to be at least one byte long. Depending on
94 the answer, the first character from the OK or the Cancel character strings
95 will be stored in the first byte of the result buffer. No NUL will be
96 added, so the result is *not* a string.
97
98 On success, the all return an index of the added information. That index
99 is useful when retrieving results with UI_get0_result(). */
100int UI_add_input_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int flags,
101 char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize);
102int UI_dup_input_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int flags,
103 char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize);
104int UI_add_verify_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int flags,
105 char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize,
106 const char *test_buf);
107int UI_dup_verify_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int flags,
108 char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize,
109 const char *test_buf);
110int UI_add_input_boolean(UI *ui, const char *prompt, const char *action_desc,
111 const char *ok_chars, const char *cancel_chars,
112 int flags, char *result_buf);
113int UI_dup_input_boolean(UI *ui, const char *prompt, const char *action_desc,
114 const char *ok_chars, const char *cancel_chars,
115 int flags, char *result_buf);
116int UI_add_info_string(UI *ui, const char *text);
117int UI_dup_info_string(UI *ui, const char *text);
118int UI_add_error_string(UI *ui, const char *text);
119int UI_dup_error_string(UI *ui, const char *text);
120
121/* These are the possible flags. They can be or'ed together. */
122/* Use to have echoing of input */
123# define UI_INPUT_FLAG_ECHO 0x01
124/*
125 * Use a default password. Where that password is found is completely up to
126 * the application, it might for example be in the user data set with
127 * UI_add_user_data(). It is not recommended to have more than one input in
128 * each UI being marked with this flag, or the application might get
129 * confused.
130 */
131# define UI_INPUT_FLAG_DEFAULT_PWD 0x02
132
133/*-
134 * The user of these routines may want to define flags of their own. The core
135 * UI won't look at those, but will pass them on to the method routines. They
136 * must use higher bits so they don't get confused with the UI bits above.
137 * UI_INPUT_FLAG_USER_BASE tells which is the lowest bit to use. A good
138 * example of use is this:
139 *
140 * #define MY_UI_FLAG1 (0x01 << UI_INPUT_FLAG_USER_BASE)
141 *
142*/
143# define UI_INPUT_FLAG_USER_BASE 16
144
145/*-
146 * The following function helps construct a prompt.
147 * phrase_desc is a textual short description of the phrase to enter,
148 * for example "pass phrase", and
149 * object_name is the name of the object
150 * (which might be a card name or a file name) or NULL.
151 * The returned string shall always be allocated on the heap with
152 * OPENSSL_malloc(), and need to be free'd with OPENSSL_free().
153 *
154 * If the ui_method doesn't contain a pointer to a user-defined prompt
155 * constructor, a default string is built, looking like this:
156 *
157 * "Enter {phrase_desc} for {object_name}:"
158 *
159 * So, if phrase_desc has the value "pass phrase" and object_name has
160 * the value "foo.key", the resulting string is:
161 *
162 * "Enter pass phrase for foo.key:"
163*/
164char *UI_construct_prompt(UI *ui_method,
165 const char *phrase_desc, const char *object_name);
166
167/*
168 * The following function is used to store a pointer to user-specific data.
169 * Any previous such pointer will be returned and replaced.
170 *
171 * For callback purposes, this function makes a lot more sense than using
172 * ex_data, since the latter requires that different parts of OpenSSL or
173 * applications share the same ex_data index.
174 *
175 * Note that the UI_OpenSSL() method completely ignores the user data. Other
176 * methods may not, however.
177 */
178void *UI_add_user_data(UI *ui, void *user_data);
179/*
180 * Alternatively, this function is used to duplicate the user data.
181 * This uses the duplicator method function. The destroy function will
182 * be used to free the user data in this case.
183 */
184int UI_dup_user_data(UI *ui, void *user_data);
185/* We need a user data retrieving function as well. */
186void *UI_get0_user_data(UI *ui);
187
188/* Return the result associated with a prompt given with the index i. */
189const char *UI_get0_result(UI *ui, int i);
190int UI_get_result_length(UI *ui, int i);
191
192/* When all strings have been added, process the whole thing. */
193int UI_process(UI *ui);
194
195/*
196 * Give a user interface parameterised control commands. This can be used to
197 * send down an integer, a data pointer or a function pointer, as well as be
198 * used to get information from a UI.
199 */
200int UI_ctrl(UI *ui, int cmd, long i, void *p, void (*f) (void));
201
202/* The commands */
203/*
204 * Use UI_CONTROL_PRINT_ERRORS with the value 1 to have UI_process print the
205 * OpenSSL error stack before printing any info or added error messages and
206 * before any prompting.
207 */
208# define UI_CTRL_PRINT_ERRORS 1
209/*
210 * Check if a UI_process() is possible to do again with the same instance of
211 * a user interface. This makes UI_ctrl() return 1 if it is redoable, and 0
212 * if not.
213 */
214# define UI_CTRL_IS_REDOABLE 2
215
216/* Some methods may use extra data */
217# define UI_set_app_data(s,arg) UI_set_ex_data(s,0,arg)
218# define UI_get_app_data(s) UI_get_ex_data(s,0)
219
220# define UI_get_ex_new_index(l, p, newf, dupf, freef) \
221 CRYPTO_get_ex_new_index(CRYPTO_EX_INDEX_UI, l, p, newf, dupf, freef)
222int UI_set_ex_data(UI *r, int idx, void *arg);
223void *UI_get_ex_data(const UI *r, int idx);
224
225/* Use specific methods instead of the built-in one */
226void UI_set_default_method(const UI_METHOD *meth);
227const UI_METHOD *UI_get_default_method(void);
228const UI_METHOD *UI_get_method(UI *ui);
229const UI_METHOD *UI_set_method(UI *ui, const UI_METHOD *meth);
230
231# ifndef OPENSSL_NO_UI_CONSOLE
232
233/* The method with all the built-in thingies */
234UI_METHOD *UI_OpenSSL(void);
235
236# endif
237
238/*
239 * NULL method. Literally does nothing, but may serve as a placeholder
240 * to avoid internal default.
241 */
242const UI_METHOD *UI_null(void);
243
244/* ---------- For method writers ---------- */
245/*-
246 A method contains a number of functions that implement the low level
247 of the User Interface. The functions are:
248
249 an opener This function starts a session, maybe by opening
250 a channel to a tty, or by opening a window.
251 a writer This function is called to write a given string,
252 maybe to the tty, maybe as a field label in a
253 window.
254 a flusher This function is called to flush everything that
255 has been output so far. It can be used to actually
256 display a dialog box after it has been built.
257 a reader This function is called to read a given prompt,
258 maybe from the tty, maybe from a field in a
259 window. Note that it's called with all string
260 structures, not only the prompt ones, so it must
261 check such things itself.
262 a closer This function closes the session, maybe by closing
263 the channel to the tty, or closing the window.
264
265 All these functions are expected to return:
266
267 0 on error.
268 1 on success.
269 -1 on out-of-band events, for example if some prompting has
270 been canceled (by pressing Ctrl-C, for example). This is
271 only checked when returned by the flusher or the reader.
272
273 The way this is used, the opener is first called, then the writer for all
274 strings, then the flusher, then the reader for all strings and finally the
275 closer. Note that if you want to prompt from a terminal or other command
276 line interface, the best is to have the reader also write the prompts
277 instead of having the writer do it. If you want to prompt from a dialog
278 box, the writer can be used to build up the contents of the box, and the
279 flusher to actually display the box and run the event loop until all data
280 has been given, after which the reader only grabs the given data and puts
281 them back into the UI strings.
282
283 All method functions take a UI as argument. Additionally, the writer and
284 the reader take a UI_STRING.
285*/
286
287/*
288 * The UI_STRING type is the data structure that contains all the needed info
289 * about a string or a prompt, including test data for a verification prompt.
290 */
291typedef struct ui_string_st UI_STRING;
292
293SKM_DEFINE_STACK_OF_INTERNAL(UI_STRING, UI_STRING, UI_STRING)
294#define sk_UI_STRING_num(sk) OPENSSL_sk_num(ossl_check_const_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk))
295#define sk_UI_STRING_value(sk, idx) ((UI_STRING *)OPENSSL_sk_value(ossl_check_const_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk), (idx)))
296#define sk_UI_STRING_new(cmp) ((STACK_OF(UI_STRING) *)OPENSSL_sk_new(ossl_check_UI_STRING_compfunc_type(cmp)))
297#define sk_UI_STRING_new_null() ((STACK_OF(UI_STRING) *)OPENSSL_sk_new_null())
298#define sk_UI_STRING_new_reserve(cmp, n) ((STACK_OF(UI_STRING) *)OPENSSL_sk_new_reserve(ossl_check_UI_STRING_compfunc_type(cmp), (n)))
299#define sk_UI_STRING_reserve(sk, n) OPENSSL_sk_reserve(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk), (n))
300#define sk_UI_STRING_free(sk) OPENSSL_sk_free(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk))
301#define sk_UI_STRING_zero(sk) OPENSSL_sk_zero(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk))
302#define sk_UI_STRING_delete(sk, i) ((UI_STRING *)OPENSSL_sk_delete(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk), (i)))
303#define sk_UI_STRING_delete_ptr(sk, ptr) ((UI_STRING *)OPENSSL_sk_delete_ptr(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk), ossl_check_UI_STRING_type(ptr)))
304#define sk_UI_STRING_push(sk, ptr) OPENSSL_sk_push(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk), ossl_check_UI_STRING_type(ptr))
305#define sk_UI_STRING_unshift(sk, ptr) OPENSSL_sk_unshift(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk), ossl_check_UI_STRING_type(ptr))
306#define sk_UI_STRING_pop(sk) ((UI_STRING *)OPENSSL_sk_pop(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk)))
307#define sk_UI_STRING_shift(sk) ((UI_STRING *)OPENSSL_sk_shift(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk)))
308#define sk_UI_STRING_pop_free(sk, freefunc) OPENSSL_sk_pop_free(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk),ossl_check_UI_STRING_freefunc_type(freefunc))
309#define sk_UI_STRING_insert(sk, ptr, idx) OPENSSL_sk_insert(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk), ossl_check_UI_STRING_type(ptr), (idx))
310#define sk_UI_STRING_set(sk, idx, ptr) ((UI_STRING *)OPENSSL_sk_set(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk), (idx), ossl_check_UI_STRING_type(ptr)))
311#define sk_UI_STRING_find(sk, ptr) OPENSSL_sk_find(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk), ossl_check_UI_STRING_type(ptr))
312#define sk_UI_STRING_find_ex(sk, ptr) OPENSSL_sk_find_ex(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk), ossl_check_UI_STRING_type(ptr))
313#define sk_UI_STRING_find_all(sk, ptr, pnum) OPENSSL_sk_find_all(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk), ossl_check_UI_STRING_type(ptr), pnum)
314#define sk_UI_STRING_sort(sk) OPENSSL_sk_sort(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk))
315#define sk_UI_STRING_is_sorted(sk) OPENSSL_sk_is_sorted(ossl_check_const_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk))
316#define sk_UI_STRING_dup(sk) ((STACK_OF(UI_STRING) *)OPENSSL_sk_dup(ossl_check_const_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk)))
317#define sk_UI_STRING_deep_copy(sk, copyfunc, freefunc) ((STACK_OF(UI_STRING) *)OPENSSL_sk_deep_copy(ossl_check_const_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk), ossl_check_UI_STRING_copyfunc_type(copyfunc), ossl_check_UI_STRING_freefunc_type(freefunc)))
318#define sk_UI_STRING_set_cmp_func(sk, cmp) ((sk_UI_STRING_compfunc)OPENSSL_sk_set_cmp_func(ossl_check_UI_STRING_sk_type(sk), ossl_check_UI_STRING_compfunc_type(cmp)))
319
320
321/*
322 * The different types of strings that are currently supported. This is only
323 * needed by method authors.
324 */
325enum UI_string_types {
326 UIT_NONE = 0,
327 UIT_PROMPT, /* Prompt for a string */
328 UIT_VERIFY, /* Prompt for a string and verify */
329 UIT_BOOLEAN, /* Prompt for a yes/no response */
330 UIT_INFO, /* Send info to the user */
331 UIT_ERROR /* Send an error message to the user */
332};
333
334/* Create and manipulate methods */
335UI_METHOD *UI_create_method(const char *name);
336void UI_destroy_method(UI_METHOD *ui_method);
337int UI_method_set_opener(UI_METHOD *method, int (*opener) (UI *ui));
338int UI_method_set_writer(UI_METHOD *method,
339 int (*writer) (UI *ui, UI_STRING *uis));
340int UI_method_set_flusher(UI_METHOD *method, int (*flusher) (UI *ui));
341int UI_method_set_reader(UI_METHOD *method,
342 int (*reader) (UI *ui, UI_STRING *uis));
343int UI_method_set_closer(UI_METHOD *method, int (*closer) (UI *ui));
344int UI_method_set_data_duplicator(UI_METHOD *method,
345 void *(*duplicator) (UI *ui, void *ui_data),
346 void (*destructor)(UI *ui, void *ui_data));
347int UI_method_set_prompt_constructor(UI_METHOD *method,
348 char *(*prompt_constructor) (UI *ui,
349 const char
350 *phrase_desc,
351 const char
352 *object_name));
353int UI_method_set_ex_data(UI_METHOD *method, int idx, void *data);
354int (*UI_method_get_opener(const UI_METHOD *method)) (UI *);
355int (*UI_method_get_writer(const UI_METHOD *method)) (UI *, UI_STRING *);
356int (*UI_method_get_flusher(const UI_METHOD *method)) (UI *);
357int (*UI_method_get_reader(const UI_METHOD *method)) (UI *, UI_STRING *);
358int (*UI_method_get_closer(const UI_METHOD *method)) (UI *);
359char *(*UI_method_get_prompt_constructor(const UI_METHOD *method))
360 (UI *, const char *, const char *);
361void *(*UI_method_get_data_duplicator(const UI_METHOD *method)) (UI *, void *);
362void (*UI_method_get_data_destructor(const UI_METHOD *method)) (UI *, void *);
363const void *UI_method_get_ex_data(const UI_METHOD *method, int idx);
364
365/*
366 * The following functions are helpers for method writers to access relevant
367 * data from a UI_STRING.
368 */
369
370/* Return type of the UI_STRING */
371enum UI_string_types UI_get_string_type(UI_STRING *uis);
372/* Return input flags of the UI_STRING */
373int UI_get_input_flags(UI_STRING *uis);
374/* Return the actual string to output (the prompt, info or error) */
375const char *UI_get0_output_string(UI_STRING *uis);
376/*
377 * Return the optional action string to output (the boolean prompt
378 * instruction)
379 */
380const char *UI_get0_action_string(UI_STRING *uis);
381/* Return the result of a prompt */
382const char *UI_get0_result_string(UI_STRING *uis);
383int UI_get_result_string_length(UI_STRING *uis);
384/*
385 * Return the string to test the result against. Only useful with verifies.
386 */
387const char *UI_get0_test_string(UI_STRING *uis);
388/* Return the required minimum size of the result */
389int UI_get_result_minsize(UI_STRING *uis);
390/* Return the required maximum size of the result */
391int UI_get_result_maxsize(UI_STRING *uis);
392/* Set the result of a UI_STRING. */
393int UI_set_result(UI *ui, UI_STRING *uis, const char *result);
394int UI_set_result_ex(UI *ui, UI_STRING *uis, const char *result, int len);
395
396/* A couple of popular utility functions */
397int UI_UTIL_read_pw_string(char *buf, int length, const char *prompt,
398 int verify);
399int UI_UTIL_read_pw(char *buf, char *buff, int size, const char *prompt,
400 int verify);
401UI_METHOD *UI_UTIL_wrap_read_pem_callback(pem_password_cb *cb, int rwflag);
402
403
404# ifdef __cplusplus
405}
406# endif
407#endif
408